104 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
104 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
[role="xpack"]
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[[securing-aliases]]
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=== Granting privileges for indices and aliases
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Elasticsearch allows to execute operations against {ref}/indices-aliases.html[index aliases],
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which are effectively virtual indices. An alias points to one or more indices,
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holds metadata and potentially a filter. The {es} {security-features} treat
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aliases and indices
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the same. Privileges for indices actions are granted on specific indices or
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aliases. In order for an indices action to be authorized, the user that executes
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it needs to have permissions for that action on all the specific indices or
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aliases that the request relates to.
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Let's look at an example. Assuming we have an index called `2015`, an alias that
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points to it called `current_year`, and a user with the following role:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"names" : [ "2015" ],
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"privileges" : [ "read" ]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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The user attempts to retrieve a document from `current_year`:
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[source,shell]
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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GET /current_year/event/1
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[s/^/PUT 2015\n{"aliases": {"current_year": {}}}\nPUT 2015\/event\/1\n{}\n/]
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The above request gets rejected, although the user has `read` privilege on the
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concrete index that the `current_year` alias points to. The correct permission
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would be as follows:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"names" : [ "current_year" ],
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"privileges" : [ "read" ]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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[float]
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==== Managing aliases
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Unlike creating indices, which requires the `create_index` privilege, adding,
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removing and retrieving aliases requires the `manage` permission. Aliases can be
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added to an index directly as part of the index creation:
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[source,shell]
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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PUT /2015?include_type_name=true
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{
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"aliases" : {
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"current_year" : {}
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}
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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or via the dedicated aliases api if the index already exists:
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[source,shell]
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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POST /_aliases
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{
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"actions" : [
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{ "add" : { "index" : "2015", "alias" : "current_year" } }
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]
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[s/^/PUT 2015\n/]
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The above requests both require the `manage` privilege on the alias name as well
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as the targeted index, as follows:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"names" : [ "20*", "current_year" ],
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"privileges" : [ "manage" ]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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The index aliases api also allows also to delete aliases from existing indices.
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The privileges required for such a request are the same as above. Both index and
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alias need the `manage` permission.
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[float]
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==== Filtered aliases
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Aliases can hold a filter, which allows to select a subset of documents that can
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be accessed out of all the documents that the physical index contains. These
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filters are not always applied and should not be used in place of
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<<document-level-security, document level security>>.
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